"Rick Parry retains our full support," he said. "Any decision to remove him would need the approval of the full Liverpool board which, it should be remembered, consists of six people - myself, Foster, David Moores, Rick himself, Tom Hicks and Tom junior.

"We have not seen the document in question and we were not party to it.

"We are not able to comment on the detail because we have not seen it. But I would reiterate that Rick retains our full support."

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The civil war which continues to rage inside the Liverpool boardroom reached new levels of ferocity yesterday when Hicks' letter calling on Parry to quit arrived at Anfield.

In the document, Hicks outlined his reasons for wanting the club's chief executive of nine years gone.

Among them are claims that team manager Rafa Benitez has told him that Parry has allowed big name signings to slip through the net because of a lack of communication.

Boardroom divide: Gillett and Hicks invested together to buy Liverpool but their working relationship has become strained

Hicks also accused Parry of failing to maximise Liverpool's commercial potential in the same way that the likes of Man United, Chelsea and Arsenal have.

Parry only learned of the letter's existence after leaving a hearing at FA headquarters in London yesterday afternoon, by which time its contents had been leaked to Sky Sports News.

Today, he was seeing the letter for the first time when he arrived at his office at Anfield.

In a statement, Parry insisted he has no plans to quit the club.

He said: "It is my intention to remain focused on the job of serving Liverpool Football Club to the best of my abilities."

Parry will be taking legal advice on the matter and today told the Echo of his disappointment that this speculation has taken the gloss away from Liverpool making it through to the semi-finals of the Champions League.

He said: "The manager, the players and the supporters will no doubt find it offensive that I am the story when we should be celebrating another great European night at Anfield."

Parry added: "The club will be fine - no individual is bigger than the club.

"But, obviously, we need leadership at the top and at the moment there is a severe lack of unity."

Hicks cannot sack Parry without the support of the majority of Liverpool's board and while the chief executive continues to retain the support of the board - apart from the Dallas-based millionaire and his son - he is unlikely to be forced out.